‘Missing’ State Dept. Email Brings ANOTHER Clinton Family Member In Heat Of Scandal

What makes all this
interesting outside the financial pages is that those investors who took
a bath with Hillary Clinton’s son-in-law turned out to be huge donors
not only to the Clinton Foundation, but also to Hillary Clinton’s
political campaigns. As the Washington Examiner reported:

Investors in the fund included Marc Lasry, CEO of Avenue
Capital Group, and Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs, according to
the Wall Street Journal.
Lasry has donated up to $250,000 to the Clinton Foundation, records
show. Goldman Sachs executives, in addition to being foundation donors,
have given Hillary Clinton more than $200,000 for her presidential
campaign, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
The California Public Employees Retirement System, known as CalPERS, invested $6.5 million in Eaglevale in May 2012, CalPERS records show.

So, when Jake Sullivan, a top Hillary aide at the State Department
emailed two Clinton Foundation heavyweights — Bill Clinton aide, Justin
Cooper, and Amitabh Desai, the foundation’s foreign policy director — it
was of more than passing interest to the watchdog group Citizens
United, which has been dogging Hillary Clinton’s political career and
digging up dirt on the former first lady for years.
A sitting secretary of state might well have professional business
dealings with an economic bailout of an important – if bankrupt –
European country, but what business did the American State Department
have sharing government information with outside groups? Especially when
big money and big names were involved?
That’s hard to say, because the State Department has “lost” the
original email in question. It’s clear from the subject line that it
refers directly to the Greek bonds – “Solidarity Bonds Greece Revised” —
and therefore to Marc Mezvinsky’s business, but the email itself and
its attachment have been “lost” by the federal bureaucracy Hillary once
ran.

‘Missing’ State Dept. Email Brings ANOTHER Clinton Family Member In Heat Of Scandal

Chelsea Clinton hasn’t been shy about pushing herself into her mother’s presidential campaign.
The former first daughter not only introduced Hillary Clinton to the
adoring throng in Philadelphia for the Democratic National Convention
back in July, she took a turn at bat swinging at Republican nominee
Donald Trump in an interview this week.
So it was only a matter of time before she showed up in her mother’s biggest scandal of all.

Chelsea Clinton’s husband, international financier Marc Mezvinsky, lost a fortune of other people’s money
when he placed a losing $25 million bet that the basket-case economy of
Greece was going to turn around thanks to a massive infusion of money
from Germany and other relatively solvent members of the European Union.
In particular, according to the Washington Examiner, Mezvinsky
was betting that an international Greek bailout would raise the price
of Greek bonds. Mesvinsky and investors in his hedge fund, Eaglevale
Hellenic Opportunity, bought up Greek stocks and government debt,
expecting to make a tidy private profit off massive public spending
(obviously a Democrat to his bones, if only a Clinton by marriage).
The investment went very sour, though, with Mezvinsky’s investors
losing almost half of the hedge fund’s $25 million by early 2015,
according to the Daily Caller. And nearly all the rest was gone by May of this year, when Mezvinsky closed down Eaglevale Hellenic, the Daily Caller reported.

What makes all this
interesting outside the financial pages is that those investors who took
a bath with Hillary Clinton’s son-in-law turned out to be huge donors
not only to the Clinton Foundation, but also to Hillary Clinton’s
political campaigns. As the Washington Examiner reported:

Investors in the fund included Marc Lasry, CEO of Avenue
Capital Group, and Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs, according to
the Wall Street Journal.
Lasry has donated up to $250,000 to the Clinton Foundation, records
show. Goldman Sachs executives, in addition to being foundation donors,
have given Hillary Clinton more than $200,000 for her presidential
campaign, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
The California Public Employees Retirement System, known as CalPERS, invested $6.5 million in Eaglevale in May 2012, CalPERS records show.

So, when Jake Sullivan, a top Hillary aide at the State Department
emailed two Clinton Foundation heavyweights — Bill Clinton aide, Justin
Cooper, and Amitabh Desai, the foundation’s foreign policy director — it
was of more than passing interest to the watchdog group Citizens
United, which has been dogging Hillary Clinton’s political career and
digging up dirt on the former first lady for years.
A sitting secretary of state might well have professional business
dealings with an economic bailout of an important – if bankrupt –
European country, but what business did the American State Department
have sharing government information with outside groups? Especially when
big money and big names were involved?
That’s hard to say, because the State Department has “lost” the
original email in question. It’s clear from the subject line that it
refers directly to the Greek bonds – “Solidarity Bonds Greece Revised” —
and therefore to Marc Mezvinsky’s business, but the email itself and
its attachment have been “lost” by the federal bureaucracy Hillary once
ran.
But considering it obviously bears directly on a topic the secretary
of state’s son-in-law had bet his professional career on, the email
should be of some interest to American taxpayers interested in just how
corrupt and conniving Hillary Clinton actually is.

Citizens United is clearly not buying the State Department story.
“Hillary Clinton truly left her mark on the State Department,” Citizens United spokesman J.T. Mastranadi told the Washington Examiner.
“Why do the most important emails always end up missing? The State
Department should explain to the American people why this information is
unavailable.”
Now, it should be pointed out here — as the liberals surely will —
that the investors ended up losing their money (and probably their trust
in Mrs. Clinton’s son-in-law). But the point is they were likely
investing in much more than financially bankrupt Greek economy getting
pulled out of the dumps by still more public money raised through the
taxes of hard-working, industrious European citizens who had no direct
say in how those funds would be spent.
Whatever Wall Street CEOs lost to Marc Mezvinsky’s mistakes, they
earned a lot of goodwill from the Clinton family in the process. And
considering Hillary Clinton was even then a virtual certainty to run for
president in 2016, that’s an investment that could pay off handsomely.
As for Chelsea, she continues to live the high life with her husband
in that $10 million luxury apartment where her mother sought shelter
from the “heat” of that 9/11 stumble-and-near-tumble medical scare in Manhattan.
And pushing herself into her mother’s presidential campaign whenever she can.